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National Trounce on Trani Month

First the NY Times. Now Style Weekly. Is the VCU president in the pocket of the tobacco industry? I still need convincing.



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James A. Bacon
Richmond.com
Wednesday, May 28, 2008

What is this, trounce on Gene Trani month?

The New York Times unloaded on Virginia Commonwealth University, and by implication the school's president Eugene Trani, last week when it concocted a story about VCU's "secretive" research contract with Philip Morris USA. (See "NY Times Slimes VCU.") Now Style Weekly has followed up with a short article, describing Trani's "deep" connections to the tobacco industry by highlighting his membership on the Universal Corp. board of directors.

Philip Morris "gave" VCU $1.3 million last year, Style writes. "But Trani, VCU's president, has gotten more from the tobacco than a million bucks. In fact, Trani is the tobacco industry."

Huh?

As a member of the Universal board of directors, Trani receives a retainer of $40,000, including stock options, plus a fee of $2,000 for each board meeting he attends and $1,500 for committee meetings. Universal is a global trader and processor of tobacco leaf.

And the implication is…?

"I don't see any connection between these two," university spokesperson Pam Lepley told Style. "And his being on the board doesn't really pertain to the university."

Lepley was too mild. First of all, Philip Morris didn't "give" VCU $1.3 million. It paid VCU $1.3 million for research services. Second of all, the research money was paid to VCU, not Trani personally. Third of all, the statement that Trani "is" the tobacco industry is ludicrous on its face. If anything, Gene Trani "is" VCU.

Look, it's the media's role to hold the rich and powerful to account. If you want to criticize Gene Trani, be my guest. While the VCU president can lay claim to significant achievements, he's not above reproach. But find something substantive to write about. Describe Trani's top-down management style and how it bottlenecks university decision-making in the president's office. Discuss VCU's latest out-sized tuition hikes. Show how VCU has thrown its weight around in its dealings with the City of Richmond. Whatever. You'll find plenty of material to work with.  But, please, don't spin something out of nothing.


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4 comments.
Richmond.com Article Feedback - Leave your comment today!

As a member of the Universal Corp Board of Directors, Trani has a fiduciary responsibility to shareholders to enhance the financial success of that tobacco company. This is the very real and very serious conflict: he is being paid to ensure tobacco sales flourish while also serving both as president of VCU Health System (treating lots of people with disease caused by tobacco use/exposure) and president of VCU and its Schools of Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, Dentistry, Allied Health, and Public Health. No one wants VCU to be shut down - just to have untainted leadership without such a glaring conflict of interest (quite visible to the world beyond Richmond's borders).


Richmond.com Article Feedback - Leave your comment today!

They bash VCU because VCU is changing Richmond, and believe it or not, some people want the negativities of this city to continue...but when you try to change, they complain. I came to VCU thinking very highly of it, and by the time I graduated the mentality of the people in Richmond towards this great university dulled my excitement a little. It's a shame, because VCU is a great school that has done so much for this city, and the press choses to rather cover "hyped up" nonsense. The same day as that article came out, VCU signed a lisence agreement with Synthetic Blood International, Inc. for blood treatment discovery intellectual property--i.e. stuff that will revolutionize the medical industry and SAVE LIVES. Style could've wrote about that. Trani's presence on that Board is irrelevant, and shows the true motive of that article was to tarnish the image of Dr. Trani and ultimately VCU.

I will concede, however, that there is tremendous support of this university in some circles in Richmond, and VCU would not be what it is today without them.


John Bailey - Email this User
5/28/2008 at 9:27:31 PM
Richmond.com Article Feedback - Leave your comment today!

Gene Trani has not only been a great leader in building up VCU into a great University, but he is also been instrumental in the revival of Downtown Richmond. He is the "Man of the Decade" in Richmond, Va. Besides that, who the hell cares what the New York Times says about Gene trani or Richmond. It's probably sour grapes on his getting Philip Morris to move it's Corporate offices and build it's research center in Downtown Richmond. I think everyone owes him a big Thank You.


Richmond.com Article Feedback - Leave your comment today!

I really don't understand the "bash VCU" mentality in this city. Every time you open a paper someone has written about how evil VCU is. The way I see it, VCU is keeping this city alive. Think about it. If VCU closed down and the 30,000 plus students and 3,000 plus faculty and however many other staff had to leave, how would the city have any money? The 150 acres the campus occupies and the rental housing students live in would fall apart. Let's stick to complaining about the issues in Richmond that actually affect the citizens of the city such as the dysfunctional city government. Even if any of the allegations against Trani were true, does it really hurt YOU?



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